According to court documents, Brown and Veronica never made it to the 3 p.m. scheduled visitation, the first of the transition order.

The adoption investigator wrote in the affidavit that she waited the entire four-hour period for Brown or an associate to arrive.

In response, the judge ruled Brown violated the terms of the transition order and awarded “sole and exclusive physical custody” to the Capobianos.

The judge said, “the transfer of that physical custody shall occur immediately,” according to court documents.

Brown’s attorneys must state where Brown is writing by Aug. 6.

Representatives for the Cherokee Nation said all parties knew Brown would be at National Guard training weeks in advance.

In response to the order, Cherokee Nation Assistant Attorney General Chrissi Nimmo released the following statement:

“It is disgusting to insinuate criminal misconduct or wrongdoing on Dusten’s behalf. He is in another state for mandatory National Guard training, which all parties and the court have known for a least two weeks. It is physically and legally impossible for Dusten to comply with the current order. This is another ploy to paint Dusten as the ‘bad guy.’ It is especially appalling while he is serving his country.”